Sep 25, 2024

William "Bill" Michael Schwarz

Posted Sep 25, 2024 8:43 PM

It is with great sorrow that we announce the sudden passing of William Michael Schwarz, on September 19, 2024. Bill was beloved as a dad, grandpa, husband, brother, uncle and friend who positively touched the lives of everyone he met. His unexpected departure leaves a deep void in our hearts.

Bill was born on October 6, 1946, in Colby, Kansas; the second of Fred and Marie (Moellering) Schwarz’s five children. He enjoyed riding horses as he was raised on a farm outside Angelus, KS. While attending grade school in Angelus, a 4H chapter was available for a couple of years. Bill picked out one of his dad’s steers to raise. FLECK was so calm that he became a family pet, and Bill gave his siblings rides on his back. All three at the same time. Fleck was reserve grand champion at the county fair, and after the auction, tears flowed every time he saw cattle. He excelled in high school at St Joseph’s Military Academy in Hays, KS, where he was a top marksman on the school’s rifle team. Upon completion of high school, he helped build I-70 from Goodland to Russell, KS and joined the Kansas National Guard in Colby. He then became a mechanic for Hooker Chevy-Olds in Oakley, and soon met the love of his life, Linda Sidles. They were married on July 13, 1968, and lived in Oakley their entire married lives. Bill and Linda could be found at a lake fishing and camping most weekends, even after 6-day work schedules! They hosted many fish fries with their bountiful catches. Soon after their marriage, Bill joined Oakley’s Volunteer Fire Department which had recently added rural firefighting equipment. He was still a proud member after 55 years of service, possibly the longest in the department’s history!

Bill and Linda opened a BIG A parts store in 1985, switching to NAPA in 1999. They expanded services like making hydraulic hoses, turning brake rotors, and rebuilding alternators to better serve the community. Quality customer service included a bag of popcorn or a knife sharpening. They ran the store together until selling it in 2008. He continued working at NAPA for a few years after the sale. In retirement, Bill loved to help farmers at harvest time, hauling many loads of wheat and corn. He also helped check and service oil wells in the Oakley area up to the present time. He loved driving around the countryside, seeing wildlife, and how the crops were doing. Checking wells was a great way to do that.

After repairing a pickup which was traded in at Hooker’s and entering it at a truck and tractor pull at the county fair in 1979, he was smitten with a desire to build a competitive 4wd pulling pickup. He remembered towing a 62 Chevy with a blown engine off the highway which wasn’t worth fixing a few years before. He scrounged junk yards to find it and other parts, and since everything for his pulling pickup came from a junk yard except for the tires, he appropriately named his 62 Chevy the “Junk Yard Dog” and began pulling with it in 1980. He and the ‘Dog’ were season points champions more often than not and have been a crowd favorite ever since. Bill became a respected member and friend to all in the pulling circuit, always willing to help his fellow competitors, but keeping a few secrets that were learned the hard way! He rarely divulged his gear ratio, tire pressures, or that his engine developed over 1700 HP. How much more - we can only guess!! Be assured that everything on the Dog was legal because Bill’s code of honor would not allow anything else.

When God looked at Bill, we think He smiled, because what He saw was a person who put ‘other’s needs’ above his own ‘wants’, a person who ‘gave’ much more than he ‘took’, and one who respected others even if they didn’t share the same views. Bill cared deeply for his family, especially his 7 grandchildren, being their ‘go to’ sitter, and attended as many of their school and sporting events as possible – the seven grand’s events kept him busy! He loved them all as they were his greatest joy! He could be found at The Bluff most days since 1998 when Brian opened it and later when BJ took ownership - either eating - visiting - - - or fixing something. There were very few things that Bill couldn’t fix around a house, yard, equipment at a business or farm, or on a vehicle. He even modified his motor home/semi to run on recycled cooking oil! Thanks, BJ, for supplying fuel to get to his truck pulls.

Bill is survived by sons Brian (Lexy) Schwarz of Salina (grandsons Brazyn and Boxtyn) and Bradley (Alisha) Schwarz of Oakley (grandchildren Adisyn, William, Jacob, Matthew, and Zachary), sister Mary Lou (Rick) Mastin of Hays, brother Larry (Ann) Schwarz of Fort Collins, CO, and sister Betty (Terry) Hockersmith of Oakley along with many beloved nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his brother Freddie, parents Fred and Marie (Moellering) Schwarz and his wife Linda (Sidles) Schwarz.

Fulfilling Bill’s desire to be an organ donor, the life of a 62-year-old man has already been extended from a liver transplant. We are awaiting news of other recipients who will also benefit from the unselfish giving of William Michael Schwarz. Bill’s profound impact on others continues to leave a rich legacy.

Bill will be honored at the Homecoming Parade in Oakley on Friday afternoon, September 27th, 2024. Visitation will be from 4-6:00 p.m. Friday, September 27, 2024, at Baalmann Mortuary, Oakley. The funeral is at 3:00 p.m. Saturday, September 28, 2024, at the Oakley United Methodist Church and will be live streamed on the church’s facebook page (www.facebook.com/share/g/L1iQiJKMEz3FdoSp/?mibextid=K35XfP). Burial will follow in the Oakley City Cemetery. Memorials may be made to the Oakley Fire Department or the Western Vista Complex for the wrestling addition and sent in care of Baalmann Mortuary, PO Box 391, Colby, KS 67701. For information or condolences visit baalmannmortuary.com